Jury finds Larry Ray guilty on all counts in Sarah Lawrence sex cult trial
Sarah Lawrence College sex-cult leader Larry Ray was convicted Wednesday afternoon on all counts by a Manhattan jury — ending a yearslong prosecution launched after the fiend’s tyrannical abuse of a group of young people was exposed in a magazine article.
Ray, 62, faces life in prison when he is sentenced by
Manhattan federal Judge Lewis Liman in September.
The convicted sex trafficker stood and faced the jury,
appearing emotionless as the foreperson repeated “guilty” to the 15 counts.
The panel deliberated for about five hours after being given
the case Monday evening.
Throughout the monthlong trial, prosecutors and victims
painted Ray as a calculating predator who asserted control over a group of
college students and others to enrich himself as the leader of a criminal organization
he dubbed “The Ray Family.”
“When his victims were completely subdued, when they were
under his control, he committed crimes to get them to pay — extortion, forced
labor, sex trafficking, obstruction of justice, financial crimes,” Assistant US
Attorney Mollie Bracewell told jurors in her closing argument.
“The defendant did all of this for control, for his own
greed, and to increase his power, to cement his position in the organized group
that he led.”
Ray’s abuse began when he moved into his daughter’s
on-campus dorm at the prestigious Westchester County college in 2010 after he
was sprung from prison in an unrelated case.
Almost immediately, Ray began grooming his daughter’s
friends, wowing them with fantastical tales about his supposed involvement in
overseas military operations and his friends in law enforcement and politics,
prosecutors said.
In the summer of 2011, a number of the students moved into
an Upper East Side one-bedroom apartment with Ray, where his abuse and control
over them increased, the feds said.
For nearly the next decade, Ray extorted his victims and
forced one of them into prostitution while laundering the proceeds of the
scheme, which totaled millions of dollars.
Federal authorities began investigating Ray after a 2020 New
York Magazine article drew the curtain back on his relationship with the former
Sarah Lawrence students.
Ray subjected his victims to physical, mental and sexual
abuse, prosecutors said at trial. Ray recorded confessions his victims made in
which they copped to damaging his property, plotting against him and poisoning
him and his family — then used the mea culpas as blackmail.
Ray carried out his criminal enterprise with the help of
Isabella Pollok, a former student who became his co-conspirator, the feds
alleged.
Ray’s most lucrative scheme was collecting money that victim
Claudia Drury earned while working as a prostitute at his direction, she
testified at trial.
For about five years, Drury worked seven days a week,
meeting monied clients who paid her exorbitant amounts of money in exchange for
sex, she said.
Drury turned over about $2.5 million to Ray that she earned
while escorting and living in various Manhattan hotels, where she would meet
her clients.
When Ray felt threatened that Drury was slipping from his
control, he and Pollok confronted her at the Gregory Hotel in Midtown, where he
tortured her for hours over the course of a night, prosecutors said.
He ordered her to strip naked, handcuffed her to a chair and
tried to suffocate her repeatedly with a plastic bag, Drury told jurors.
“I was terrified. I was trembling. You can’t breathe. You
want to breathe a lot. That just makes it much worse,” she testified in March.
Ray also doused Drury’s naked body with water and moved her
chair over to an air conditioner in the room, she said.
During the hours-long torture session, Ray and Pollok paused
to eat hamburgers they had ordered from a nearby diner, Drury testified.
The torture session was powerful evidence that Ray had
committed almost all of the crimes he was charged with, Bracewell told jurors
in her closing argument.
“Ladies and gentlemen, this single night of crime tells you
almost all you need to know. But, as we will cover and as you have seen, there
is so much more,” she said.
In a statement, US Attorney for the Southern District of New
York, Damian Williams, hailed the verdict.
“Let me be very clear. Larry Ray is a predator. An evil man
who did evil things. Today’s verdict finally brings him to justice,” Williams
said.
“This verdict would not have been possible without the
victims who testified in court. We are
in awe of their bravery in the face of incredible trauma,” he added.
Throughout the trial, Ray’s defense team tried to undermine
his accusers’ credibility and painted them as a group of “storytellers” who
embellished stories about Ray because they were jealous of him or otherwise
wanted to damage him.
In her closing argument, Ray lawyer Marne Lenox attacked
Drury’s account of the night she was tortured by the defendant, claiming it was
fiction.
“There was no assault in the Gregory Hotel. It never
happened,” Lenox said.
Ray has been locked up in the Brooklyn Metropolitan
Detention Center since his arrest in 2020.
Pollok was subsequently charged for her alleged role in the
enterprise and has pleaded not guilty. She’s scheduled to go to trial later
this year.
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